He served as chairman of the Committee on Expenditures in the Department of the Navy (Sixty-sixth Congress).
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He was an unsuccessful candidate for election in 1912 to the Sixty-third Congress.
Haskell | Haskell (programming language) | Haskell Wexler | Reuben Kosgei | Reuben Droughns | Reuben | J. Reuben Clark | Haskell County, Texas | Haskell County, Oklahoma | Reuben Morgan | Susan Haskell | Stewart Reuben | Reuben Sutherland | Reuben Rogers | Reuben L. Haskell | Reuben (band) | Tribe of Reuben | Reuben White | Reuben Wells Leonard | Reuben Tam | Reuben Sturman | Reuben Ship | Reuben, Reuben | Reuben Reid | Reuben Moon | Reuben May | Reuben Klamer | Reuben Kadish | Reuben Joshua Poupko | Reuben Jones |
Born in West Leipsic, Ohio on March 13, 1860, Charles Haskell was the son of George R. Haskell, a cooper who died when the boy was three years old.
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In his work as an attorney, Haskell became one of the most successful lawyers in Ottawa, Ohio, the county seat, as well as one of the most prominent members of the Democratic Party in northwestern Ohio.
David George Haskell is an American biologist, author, and professor of biology at Sewanee: The University of the South, in Sewanee, Tennessee.
Because of this, he was one of the few who survived the cuts the newly elected Democratic governor of Oklahoma, Charles N. Haskell, made to the University; cuts which included the first president of Oklahoma, David Ross Boyd.
Volk was elected as a Republican to the 66th United States Congress to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Reuben L. Haskell, and was re-elected to the 67th United States Congress, holding office from November 2, 1920, to March 3, 1923.
A member of The Jockey Club, Iselin and Amory L. Haskell headed a group of investors who founded the Monmouth Park Jockey Club in 1944 to build a new Thoroughbred horse racing facility in Oceanport, New Jersey.
Together with two other Adventist preachers, John Corliss and Mendel Israel, he helped start the Signs Publishing Company first began as the Echo Publishing Company, in North Fitzroy, a suburb of Melbourne, which by 1889, was the third largest Seventh-day Adventist publishing house in the world.